The creator of this video also did in-depth reviews of music notation software. After reviewing the free and open source MuseScore he took over the design lead of the project, and it has become considerably better.
The creator of this video also did in-depth reviews of music notation software. After reviewing the free and open source MuseScore he took over the design lead of the project, and it has become considerably better.
I for one like an open and public forum that allows for opinions I don’t agree with. A diversity of opinion definitely seems like a big plus to me.
How does this work? I’ve been considering using a Raspberry Pi for Pihole, but I’ve been discouraged as it wouldn’t work for YouTube anyways. How I understand it is that Pihole is DNS, which just blocks certain domains. Since Youtube ads and videos are indistinguishable from a networking POV, it won’t be able to block them. Am I wrong? Is there something I have misunderstood?
Cool answer, but ignores the question, no?
It seems like a lot of Lemmy users are slightly radical american “leftists”. This is an example of this on Lemmy.world. It seems that some users see Lemmy as a forum for politicly “left”-leaning americans, not a general purpose forum. Maybe some people prefer an echo chamber?
Avelon. A native iOS app with a decently active developer. Has all features i would expect from a Lemmy app at this point.
I also tried Voyager, but it seemed a bit off to me.
For me it’s laziness.
Imagine the survival rate without precautions. (e.g. look at Italy 2020)
I am not looking to block a community. I am looking to interact with the “local” feed of another instance. That is, I want a feed with posts from all communities of an instance, just like I have for lemmy.world in my local feed now.
I don’t think you understand what I am asking.
Do you have instructions on how to do this in Voyager? To be clear I am using the iOS app.
That makes just about 100% then.
Half the posts are also just people specualting about activity on lemmy.
One thing Lemmy is missing is a way to join that doesn’t require you to understand the fediverse - currently the barrier of entry is quite high. Also, there aren’t any great user interfaces yet, which makes the platform difficult to use.
They did the last time this was an issue.
A reducer “reduces” a list of values to one value with some function by applying it to 2 values at the time.
For instance if you reduce the list [1, 2, 3] with the sum function you get (1 + (2 + 3)) = 6.
Definitely, although I’m sure that under the hood it’s all the same. Some (albeit high-level) languages also support a sum function that takes a generator as an input, which seems pretty close to this math notation.
Is Apple not going to allow sideloading in the EU soon?